1. Glossary of Financial Terms
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Safe harbor lease
S A lease to transfer tax benefits of ownership
(depreciation and debt tax shield) from the lessee, if
the lessee could not use them, to a lessor that could
use them.
Safekeep
For a fee, bankers will hold in their vault, clip coupons
on, and present for payment at maturity bonds and
money market instruments.
Safety cushion
In a contingent immunization strategy, the difference
between the initially available immunization level and
the safety-net return.
Safety-net return
The minimum available return that will trigger an
immunization strategy in a contingent immunization
strategy.
Sale and lease-back
Sale of an existing asset to a financial institution that
then leases it back to the user. Related: lease.
Sales charge
The fee charged by a mutual fund when purchasing
shares, usually payable as a commission to marketing
agent, such as a financial advisor, who is thus
compensated for his assistance to a purchaser. It
represents the difference, if any, between the share
purchase price and the share net asset value.
Sales forecast
A key input to a firm's financial planning process.
External sales forecasts are based on historical
experience, statistical analysis, and consideration of
various macroeconomic factors.
Sales-type lease
An arrangement whereby a firm leases its own
equipment, such as IBM leasing its own computers,
thereby competing with an independent leasing
company.
Salvage value
Scrap value of plant and equipment.
Samurai bond
A yen-denominated bond issued in Tokyo by a non-
Japanese borrower. Related: bulldog bond and
Yankee bond.
2. Samurai market
The foreign market in Japan.
Savings and Loan association
National- or state-chartered institution that accepts
savings deposits and invests the bulk of the funds thus
received in mortgages.
Savings deposits
Accounts that pay interest, typically at below-market
interest rates, that do not have a specific maturity, and
that usually can be withdrawn upon demand.
SBIC
Small Business Investment Company.
Scale
A bank that offers to pay different rates of interest on
CDs of varying rates is said to "post a scale."
Commercial paper dealers also post scales.
Scale enhancing
Describes a project that is in the same risk class as the
whole firm.
Scale in
When a trader or investor gradually takes a position in
a security or market over time.
Scalp
To trade for small gains. It normally involves
establishing and liquidating a position quickly, usually
within the same day.
Scenario analysis
The use of horizon analysis to project bond total
returns under different reinvestment rates and future
market yields.
Scheduled cash flows
The mortgage principal and interest payments due to
be paid under the terms of the mortgage not including
possible prepayments.
Search costs
Costs associated with locating a counterparty to a
trade, including explicit costs (such as advertising) and
implicit costs (such as the value of time).
Related:information costs.
Seasoned datings
Extended credit for customers who order goods in
periods other than peak seasons.
Seasoned issue
Issue of a security for which there is an existing
market. Related: Unseasoned issue.
Seasoned new issue
3. A new issue of stock after the company's securities
have previously been issued. A seasoned new issue of
common stock can be made by using a cash offer or a
rights offer.
SEC
The Securities and Exchange Commission, the
primary federal regulatory agency of the securities
industry.
Second pass regression
A cross-sectional regression of portfolio returns on
betas. The estimated slope is the measurement of the
reward for bearing systematic risk during the period
analyzed.
Secondary issue
(1) Procedure for selling blocks of seasoned issues of
stocks. (2) More generally, sale of already issued
stock.
Secondary market
The market where securities are traded after they are
initially offered in the primary market. Most trading is
done in the secondary market. The New York stock
Exchange, as well as all other stock exchanges, the
bond markets, etc., are secondary markets. Seasoned
securities are traded in the secondary market.
Sector
Refers to a group of securities that are similar with
respect to maturity, type, rating, industry, and/or
coupon.
Section 482
United States Department of Treasury regulations
governing transfer prices.
Secured debt
Debt that, in the event of default, has first claim on
specified assets.
Securities & Exchange Commission
The SEC is a federal agency that regulates the
U.S.financial markets.
Securities analysts
Related:financial analysts
Securitization
The process of creating a passthrough, such as the
mortgage pass-through security, by which the pooled
assets become standard securities backed by those
assets. Also, refers to the replacement of
nonmarketable loans and/or cash flows provided by
financial intermediaries with negotiable securities
4. issued in the public capital markets.
Security
Piece of paper that proves ownership of stocks, bonds
and other investments.
Security characteristic line
A plot of the excess return on a security over the risk-
free rate as a function of the excess return on the
market.
Security deposit (initial)
Synonymous with the term margin. A cash amount of
funds that must be deposited with the broker for each
contract as a guarantee of fulfillment of the futures
contract. It is not considered as part payment or
purchase. Related: margin
Security deposit (maintenance)
Related:Maintenance margin security market line
(SML). A description of the risk return relationship for
individual securities, expressed in a form similar to the
capital market line.
Security market line
Line representing the relationship between expected
return and market risk.
Security market plane
A plane that shows the equilibrium between expected
return and the beta coefficient of more than one factor.
Security selection
See: security selection decision.
Security selection decision
Choosing the particular securities to include in a
portfolio.
Self-liquidating loan
Loan to finance current assets, The sale of the current
assets provides the cash to repay the loan.
Self-selection
Consequence of a contract that induces only one group
(e.g. low risk individuals) to participate.
Sell hedge
Related: short hedge.
Sell limit order
Conditional trading order that indicates that a, security
may be sold at the designated price or higher. Related:
buy limit order.
Selling group
All banks involved in selling or marketing a new issue
of stock or bonds
Selling short
5. If an investor thinks the price of a stock is going
down, the investor could borrow the stock from a
broker and sell it. Eventually, the investor must buy
the stock back on the open market. For instance, you
borrow 1000 shares of XYZ on July 1 and sell it for $8
per share. Then, on Aug 1, you purchase 1000 shares
of XYZ at $7 per share. You've made $1000 (less
commissions and other fees) by selling short.
Sell-side analyst
Also called a Wall Street analyst, a financial analyst
who works for a brokerage firm and whose
recommendations are passed on to the brokerage
firm's customers.
Semi-strong form efficiency
A form of pricing efficiency where the price of the
security fully reflects all public information
(including, but not limited to, historical price and
trading patterns). Compare weak form efficiency and
strong form efficiency.
Senior debt
Debt that, in the event of bankruptcy, must be repaid
before subordinated debt receives any payment.
Seniority
The order of repayment. In the event of bankruptcy,
senior debt must be repaid before subordinated debt is
repaid.
Sensitivity analysis
Analysis of the effect on a project's profitability due to
changes in sales, cost, and so on.
Separation property
The property that portfolio choice can be separated
into two independent tasks: 1) determination of the
optimal risky portfolio, which is a purely technical
problem, and 2) the personal choice of the best mix of
the risky portfolio and the risk-free asset.
Separation theorem
The value of an investment to an individual is not
dependent on consumption preferences. All investors
will want to accept or reject the same investment
projects by using the NPV rule, regardless of personal
preference.
Serial bonds
Corporate bonds arranged so that specified principal
amounts become due on specified dates. Related: term
bonds.
Serial covariance
6. The covariance between a variable and the lagged
value of the variable; the same as autocovariance.
Series bond
Bond that may be issued in several series under the
same indenture.
Series
Options: All option contracts of the same class that
also have the same unit of trade, expiration date, and
exercise price. Stocks: shares which have common
characteristics, such as rights to ownership and voting,
dividends, par value, etc. In the case of many foreign
shares, one series may be owned only by citizens of
the country in which the stock is registered.
Set of contracts perspective
View of corporation as a set of contracting
relationships, among individuals who have conflicting
objectives, such as shareholders or managers. The
corporation is a legal contrivance that serves as the
nexus for the contracting relationships.
Settlement
When payment is made for a trade.
Settlement date
The date on which payment is made to settle a trade.
For stocks traded on US exchanges, settlement is
currently 3 business days after the trade. For mutual
funds, settlement usually occurs in the U.S.the day
following the trade. In some regional markets, foreign
shares may require months to settle.
Settlement price
A figure determined by the closing range which is
used to calculate gains and losses in futures market
accounts. Settlement prices are used to determine
gains, losses, margin calls, and invoice prices for
deliveries. Related: closing range.
Settlement rate
The rate suggested in Financial Accounting Standard
Board (FASB) 87 for discounting the obligations of a
pension plan. The rate at which the pension benefits
could be effectively settled off the pension plan
wished to terminate its pension obligation.
Seykota, Ed
Ed Seykota is interviewed by Jack Schwager in
Schwager's book, Market Wizards. Seykota was
graduated from MIT in the early 1970s, and went on
to develop the first commercially sold commodities
trading system. Seykota went into business for
7. himself, and in the years 1974-1989, managed to grow
a $5,000 trading account to over $15 million dollars.
Mr. Seykota is a trading genius who has been able to
identify robust patterns of price action that repeat
themselves in different markets. His quantitative and
systematic approach to trading has been an inspiration
for many. Mr. Seykota is also a genius when it comes
to understanding human psychology.
Share repurchase
Program by which a corporation buys back its own
shares in the open market. It is usually done when
shares are undervalued. Since it reduces the number of
shares outstanding and thus increases earnings per
share, it tends to elevate the market value of the
remaining shares held by stockholders.
Shareholders' equity
This is a company's total assets minus total liabilities.
A company's net worth is the same thing.
Shareholders' letter
A section of an annual report where one can find
jargon-free discussions by management of successful
and failed strategies which provides guidance for the
probing of the rest of the report.
Shares
Certificates or book entries representing ownership in
a corporation or similar entity
Shark repellant
Amendment to company charter intended to protect it
against takeover.
Sharpe benchmark
A statistically created benchmark that adjusts for a
managers' index-like tendencies.
Sharpe ratio
A measure of a portfolio's excess return relative to the
total variability of the portfolio. Related: treynor index
Shelf registration
A procedure that allows firms to file one registration
statement covering several issues of the same security.
Shirking
The tendency to do less work when the return is
smaller. Owners may have more incentive to shirk if
they issue equity as opposed to debt, because they
retain less ownership interest in the company and
therefore may receive a smaller return. Thus, shirking
is considered an agency cost of equity.
Shogun bond
8. Dollar bond issued in Japan by a nonresident.
Shop
Wall Street jargon for a firm.
Shopping
Seeking to obtain the best bid or offer available by
calling a number of dealers and/or brokers.
Short
One who has sold a contract to establish a market
position and who has not yet closed out this position
through an offsetting purchase; the opposite of a long
position. Related: Long.
Short bonds
Bonds with short current maturities.
Short book
See: unmatched book.
Short hedge
The sale of a futures contract(s) to eliminate or lessen
the possible decline in value ownership of an
approximately equal amount of the actual financial
instrument or physical commodity.Related: Long
hedge.
Short interest
This is the total number of shares of a security that
investors have borrowed, then sold in the hope that the
security will fall in value. An investor then buys back
the shares and pockets the difference as profit.
Short position
Occurs when a person sells stocks he or she does not
yet own. Shares must be borrowed, before the sale, to
make "good delivery" to the buyer. Eventually, the
shares must be bought to close out the transaction.
This technique is used when an investor believes the
stock price will go down.
Short sale
Selling a security that the seller does not own but is
committed to repurchasing eventually. It is used to
capitalize on an expected decline in the security's
price.
Short selling
Establishing a market position by selling a security
one does not own in anticipation of the price of that
security falling.
Short squeeze
A situation in which a lack of supply tends to force
prices upward.
Short straddle
9. A straddle in which one put and one call are sold.
Shortage cost
Costs that fall with increases in the level of investment
in current assets.
Shortfall risk
The risk of falling short of any investment target.
Short-run operating activities
Events and decisions concerning the short-term
finance of a firm, such as how much inventory to
order and whether to offer cash terms or credit terms
to customers.
Short-term financial plan
A financial plan that covers the coming fiscal year.
Short-term investment services
Services that assist firms in making short-term
investments.
Short-term solvency ratios
Ratios used to judge the adequacy of liquid assets for
meeting short-term obligations as they come due,
including (1) the current ratio, (2) the acid-test ratio,
(3) the inventory turnover ratio, and (4) the accounts
receivable turnover ratio.
Short-term tax exempts
Short-term securities issued by states, municipalities,
local housing agencies, and urban renewal agencies.
SIC
Abbreviation for Standard Industrial Classification.
Each 4-digit code represents a unique business
activity.
Side effects
Effects of a proposed project on other parts of the
firm.
Sight draft
Demand for immediate payment.
SIMEX (Singapore International Monetary Exchange)
A leading futures and options exchange in Singapore.
Simple prospect
An investment opportunity where a certain initial
wealth is placed at risk and only two outcomes are
possible.
Single country fund
A mutual fund that invests in individual countries
outside the United States.
Single factor model
A model of security returns that acknowledges only
one common factor. See: factor model.
10. Single index model
A model of stock returns that decomposes influences
on returns into a systematic factor, as measured by the
return on the broad market index, and firm specific
factors.
Signal
The process of conveying information through a firm's
actions.
Signaling approach
Approach to the determination of the optimal capital
structure asserting that insiders in a firm have
information that the market does not have; therefore,
the choice of capital structure by insiders can signal
information to outsiders and change the value of the
firm. This theory is also called the asymmetric
information approach.
Signaling view (on dividend policy)
The argument that dividend changes are important
signals to investors about changes in management's
expectation about future earnings.
Simple compound growth method
A method of calculating the growth rate by relating
the terminal value to the initial value and assuming a
constant percentage annual rate of growth between
these two values.
Simple interest
Interest calculated only on the initial investment.
Related:compound interest.
Simple linear regression
A regression analysis between only two variables, one
dependent and the other explanatory.
Simple linear trend model
An extrapolative statistical model that asserts that
earnings have a base level and grow at a constant
amount each period.
Simple moving average
The mean, calculated at any time over a past period of
fixed length.
Simulation
The use of a mathematical model to imitate a situation
many times in order to estimate the likelihood of
various possible outcomes. See: Monte Carlo
simulation.
Single-index model
Related: market model
Single-payment bond
11. A bond that will make only one payment of principal
and interest.
Single-premium deferred annuity
An insurance policy bought by the sponsor of a
pension plan for a single premium. In return, the
insurance company agrees to make lifelong payments
to the employee (the policyholder) when that
employee retires.
Sinker
Sinking fund.
Sinking fund requirement
A condition included in some corporate bond
indentures that requires the issuer to retire a specified
portion of debt each year. Any principal due at
maturity is called the balloon maturity.
Size
Large in size, as in the size of an offering, the size of
an order, or the size of a trade. Size is relative from
market to market and security to security. Context: "I
can buy size at 102-22," means that a trader can buy a
significant amount at 102-22.
Skewed distribution
Probability distribution in which an unequal number
of observations lie below and above the mean.
Skip-day settlement
The trade is settled one business day beyond what is
normal.
Slippage
The difference between estimated transaction costs
and actual transaction costs. The difference is usually
composed of revisions to price difference or spread
and commission costs.
Small-firm effect
The tendency of small firms (in terms of total market
capitalization) to outperform the stock market
(consisting of both large and small firms).
Small issues exemption
Securities issues that involve less than $1.5 million are
not required to file a registration statement with the
SEC. Instead, they are governed by Regulation A, for
which only a brief offering statement is needed.
Smithsonian agreement
A revision to the Bretton Woods international
monetary system which was signed at the Smithsonian
Institution in Washington, D.C., U.S.A., in December
1971. Included were a new set of par values, widened
12. bands to +/- 2.25% of par, and an increase in the
official value of gold to US$38.00 per ounce.
Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial
Telecommunications (SWIFT)
A dedicated computer network to support funds
transfer messages internationally between over 900
member banks worldwide.
"Soft" Capital Rationing
Capital rationing that under certain circumstances can
be violated or even viewed as made up of targets
rather than absolute constraints.
Soft currency
A currency that is expected to drop in value relative to
other currencies.
Soft dollars
The value of research services that brokerage houses
supply to investment managers "free of charge" in
exchange for the investment manager's
business/commissions.
Sole proprietorship
A business owned by a single individual. The sole
proprietorship pays no corporate income tax but has
unlimited liability for business debts and obligations.
Sovereign risk
The risk that a central bank will impose foreign
exchange regulations that will reduce or negate the
value of FX contracts. Also refers to the risk of
government default on a loan made to it or guaranteed
by it.
Span
To cover all contingencies within a specified range.
Special dividend
Also referred to as an extra dividend. Dividend that is
unlikely to be repeated.
Special drawing rights (SDR)
A form of international reserve assets, created by the
IMF in 1967, whose value is based on a portfolio of
widely used currencies.
Specialist
On an exchange, the member firm that is designated as
the market maker (or dealer for a listed common
stock). Only one specialist can be designated for a
given stock, but dealers may be specialists for several
stocks. In contrast, there can be multiple market
makers in the OTC market.
Specific issues market
13. The market in which dealers reverse in securities they
wish to short.
Specific risk
See:unique risk.
Spectail
A dealer that does business with retail but that
concentrates more on acquiring and financing its own
speculative positions.
Speculative demand (for money)
The need for cash to take advantage of investment
opportunities that may arise.
Speculative grade bond
Bond rated Ba or lower by Moody's, or BB or lower
by S&P, or an unrated bond.
Speculative motive
A desire to hold cash for the purpose of being in a
position to exploit any attractive investment
opportunity requiring a cash expenditure that might
arise.
Speculator
One, who attempts to anticipate price changes and,
through buying and selling contracts, aims to make
profits. A speculator does not use the market in
connection with the production, processing, marketing
or handling of a product.See: trader.
Speed
Related:prepayment speed
Spin-off
A company can create an independent company from
an existing part of the company by selling or
distributing new shares in the so-called spinoff.
Split
Sometimes, companies split their outstanding shares
into a larger number of shares. If a company with 1
million shares did a two-for-one split, the company
would have 2 million shares. An investor with 100
shares before the split would hold 200 shares after the
split. The investor's percentage of equity in the
company remains the same, and the price of the stock
he owns is one-half the price of the stock on the day
prior to the split.
Split-fee option
An option on an option. The buyer generally executes
the split fee with first an initial fee, with a window
period at the end of which upon payment of a second
fee the original terms of the option may be extended to
14. a later predetermined final notification date.
Split-rate tax system
A tax system that taxes retained earnings at a higher
rate than earnings that are distributed as dividends.
Spot exchange rates
Exchange rate on currency for immediate delivery.
Related: forward exchange rate.
Spot futures parity theorem
Describes the theoretically correct relationship
between spot and futures prices. Violation of the
parity relationship gives rise to arbitrage opportunities.
Spot interest rate
Interest rate fixed today on a loan that is made today.
Related: forward interest rates.
Spot lending
The origination of mortgages by processing
applications taken directly from prospective
borrowers.
Spot markets
Related: cash markets
Spot month
The nearest delivery month on a futures contract.
Spot price
The current marketprice of the actual physical
commodity. Also called cash price.
Spot rate
The theoretical yield on a zero-coupon Treasury
security.
Spot rate curve
The graphical depiction of the relationship between
the spot rates and maturity.
Spot trade
The purchase and sale of a foreign currency,
commodity, or other item for immediate delivery.
Spread
(1) The gap between bid and ask prices of a stock or
other security. (2) The simultaneous purchase and sale
of separate futures or options contracts for the same
commodity for delivery in different months. Also
known as a straddle. (3) Difference between the price
at which an underwriter buys an issue from a firm and
the price at which the underwriter sells it to the public.
(4) The price an issuer pays above a benchmark fixed-
income yield to borrow money.
Spread income
Also called margin income, the difference between
15. income and cost. For a depository institution, the
difference between the assets it invests in (loans and
securities) and the cost of its funds (deposits and other
sources).
Spread strategy
A strategy that involves a position in one or more
options so that the cost of buying an option is funded
entirely or in part by selling another option in the same
underlying. Also called spreading.
Spreadsheet
A computer program that organizes numerical data
into rows and columns on a terminal screen, for
calculating and making adjustments based on new
data.
Stakeholders
All parties that have an interest, financial or otherwise,
in a firm - stockholders, creditors, bondholders,
employees, customers, management, the community,
and the government.
Stand-alone principle
Investment principle that states a firm should accept or
reject a project by comparing it with securities in the
same risk class.
Standard deviation
The square root of the variance. A measure of
dispersion of a set of data from their mean.
Standard error
In statistics, a measure of the possible error in an
estimate.
Standardized normal distribution
A normal distribution with a mean of 0 and a standard
deviation of 1.
Standardized value
Also called the normal deviate, the distance of one
data point from the mean, divided by the standard
deviation of the distribution.
Standby agreement
In a rights issue, agreement that the underwriter will
purchase any stock not purchased by investors.
Standby fee
Amount paid to an underwriter who agrees to purchase
any stock that is not subscribed to the public investor
in a rights offering.
Standstill agreements
Contracts where the bidding firm in a takeover attempt
agrees to limit its holdings another firm.
16. Stated annual interest rate
The interest rate expressed as a per annum percentage,
by which interest payment is determined.
Stated conversion price
At the time of issuance of a convertible security, the
price the issuer effectively grants the security holder to
purchase the common stock, equal to the par value of
the convertible security divided by the conversion
ratio.
Stated maturity
For the CMO tranche, the date the last payment would
occur at zero CPR.
Statement billing
Billing method in which the sales for a period such as
a month (for which a customer also receives invoices)
are collected into a single statement and the customer
must pay all of the invoices represented on the
statement.
Statement of cash flows
A financial statement showing a firm's cash receipts
and cash payments during a specified period.
Statement-of-cash-flows method
A method of cash budgeting that is organized along
the lines of the statement of cash flows.
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 8
This is a currency translation standard previously in
use by U.S. accounting firms. See: Statement of
Accounting Standards No. 52.
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 52
This is the currency translation standard currently used
by U.S. firms. It mandates the use of the current rate
method. See: Statement of Financial Accounting
Standards No. 8.
Static theory of capital structure
Theory that the firm's capital structure is determined
by a trade-off of the value of tax shields against the
costs of bankruptcy.
Statutory surplus
The surplus of an insurance company determined by
the accounting treatment of both assets and liabilities
as established by state statutes.
Steady state
As the MBS pool ages, or four to six months after it
was passed at least once through the threshold for
refinancing, the prepayment speed tends to stabilize
within a fairly steady range.
17. Steepening of the yield curve
A change in the yield curve where the spread between
the yield on a long-term and short-term Treasury has
increased. Compare flattening of the yield curve and
butterfly shift.
Step-up
To increase, as in step up the tax basis of an asset.
Step-up bond
A bond that pays a lower coupon rate for an initial
period which then increases to a higher coupon rate.
Related: Deferred-interest bond, Payment-in-kind
bond
Sterilized intervention
Foreign exchange market intervention in which the
monetary authorities have insulated their domestic
money supplies from the foreign exchange
transactions with offsetting sales or purchases of
domestic assets.
Stochastic models
Liability-matching models that assume that the
liability payments and the asset cash flows are
uncertain. Related: Deterministic models.
Stock
Ownership of a corporation which is represented by
shares which represent a piece of the corporation's
assets and earnings.
Stock dividend
Payment of a corporate dividend in the form of stock
rather than cash. The stock dividend may be additional
shares in the company, or it may be shares in a
subsidiary being spun off to shareholders. Stock
dividends are often used to conserve cash needed to
operate the business. Unlike a cash dividend, stock
dividends are not taxed until sold.
Stock exchanges
Formal organizations, approved and regulated by the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), that are
made up of members that use the facilities to exchange
certain common stocks. The two major national stock
exchanges are the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
and the American Stock Exchange (ASE or AMEX).
Five regional stock exchanges include the Midwest,
Pacific, Philadelphia, Boston, and Cincinnati. The
Arizona stock exchange is an after hours electronic
marketplace where anonymous participants trade
stocks via personal computers.
18. Stock repurchase
A firm's repurchase of outstanding shares of its
common stock.
Stock selection
An active portfolio management technique that
focuses on advantageous selection of particular stocks
rather than on broad asset allocation choices.
Stockholder equity
Balance sheet item that includes the book value of
ownership in the corporation. It includes capital stock,
paid in surplus, and retained earnings.
Stock index option
An option in which the underlying is a common stock
index.
Stock market
Also called the equity market, the market for trading
equities.
Stock option
An option in which the underlying is the common
stock of a corporation.
Stock replacement strategy
A strategy for enhancing a portfolio's return,
employed when the futures contract is expensive
based on its theoretical price, involving a swap
between the futures, treasury bills portfolio and a
stock portfolio.
Stock split
Occurs when a firm issues new shares of stock but in
turn lowers the current market price of its stock to a
level that is proportionate to pre-split prices. For
example, if IBM trades at $100 before a 2-for-1 split,
after the split it will trade at $50 and holders of the
stock will have twice as many shares than they had
before the split. See: split.
Stock ticker
This is a lettered symbol assigned to securities and
mutual funds that trade on U.S.financial exchanges.
Stockholder
Holder of equity shares in a firm.
Stockholder's books
Set of books kept by firm management for its annual
report that follows Financial Accounting Standards
Board rules. The tax books follow IRS tax rules.
Stockholder's equity
The residual claims that stockholders have against a
firm's assets, calculated by subtracting total liabilities
19. from total assets.
Stockout
Running out of inventory.
Stop-loss order
An order to sell a stock when the price falls to a
specified level.
Stop order (or stop)
An order to buy or sell at the market when a definite
price is reached, either above (on a buy) or below (on
a sell) the price that prevailed when the order was
given.
Stopping curve
A curve showing the refunding rates for different
points in time at which the expected value of
refunding immediately equals the expected value of
waiting to refund.
Stopping curve refunding rate
A refunding rate that falls on the stopping curve.
Stop-limit order
A stop order that designates a price limit. In contrast
to the stop order, which becomes a market order once
the stop is reached, the stop-limit order becomes a
limit order once the stop is reached.
Straddle
Purchase or sale of an equal number of puts and calls
with the same terms at the same time. Related: spread
Straight line depreciation
An equal dollar amount of depreciation in each
accounting period.
Straight value
Also called investment value, the value of a
convertible security without the con-version option.
Straight voting
A shareholder may cast all of his votes for each
candidate for the board of directors.
Stratified equity indexing
A method of constructing a replicating portfolio in
which the stocks in the index are classified into
stratum, and each stratum is represented in the
portfolio.
Stratified sampling approach to indexing
An approach in which the index is divided into cells,
each representing a different characteristic of the
index, such as duration or maturity.
Stratified sampling bond indexing
A method of bond indexing that divides the index into
20. cells, each cell representing a different characteristic,
and that buys bonds to match those characteristics.
Street
Brokers, dealers, underwriters, and other
knowledgeable members of the financial community;
from Wall Street financial community.
Street name
Describes securities held by a broker on behalf of a
client but registered in the name of the Wall Street
firm.
Strike index
For a stock index option, the index value at which the
buyer of the option can buy or sell the underlying
stock index. The strike index is converted to a dollar
value by multiplying by the option's contract multiple.
Related: strike price
Strike price
The stated price per share for which underlying stock
may be purchased (in the case of a call) or sold (in the
case of a put) by the option holder upon exercise of
the option contract.
Strip mortgage participation certificate (strip PC)
Ownership interests in specified mortgages purchased
by Freddie Mac from a single seller in exchange for
strip PCs representing interests in the same mortgages.
Stripped bond
Bond that can be subdivided into a series of zero-
coupon bonds.
Stripped mortgage-backed securities (SMBSs)
Securities that redistribute the cash flows from the
underlying generic MBS collateral into the principal
and interest components of the MBS to enhance their
use in meeting special needs of investors.
Strip, strap
Variants of a straddle. A strip is two puts and one call
on a stock, a strap is two calls and one put on a stock.
In both cases, the puts and calls have the same strike
price and expiration date.
Strong-form efficiency
Pricing efficiency, where the price of a, security
reflects all information, whether or not it is publicly
available. Related: Weak form efficiency, semi strong
form efficiency
Structured arbitrage transaction
A self-funding, self-hedged series of transactions that
usually utilize mortgage securities as the primary
21. assets.
Structured debt
Debt that has been customized for the buyer, often by
incorporating unusual options.
Structured portfolio strategy
A strategy in which a portfolio is designed to achieve
the performance of some predetermined liabilities that
must be paid out in the future.
Structured settlement
An agreement in settlement of a lawsuit involving
specific payments made over a period of time.
Property and casualty insurance companies often buy
life insurance products to pay the costs of such
settlements.
Subject
Refers to a bid or offer that cannot be executed
without confirmation from the customer.
Subject to opinion
An auditor's opinion reflecting acceptance of a
company's financial statements subject to pervasive
uncertainty that cannot be adequately measured, such
as information relating to the value of inventories,
reserves for losses, or other matters subject to
judgment.
Subjective probabilities
Probabilities that are determined subjectively (for
example, on the basis of judgement rather than using
statistical sampling).
Subordinated debenture bond
An unsecured bond that ranks after secured debt, after
debenture bonds, and often after some general
creditors in its claim on assets and earnings. Related:
Debenture bond, mortgage bond, collateral trust
bonds.
Subordinated debt
Debt over which senior debt takes priority. In the
event of bankruptcy, subordinated debtholders receive
payment only after senior debt claims are paid in full.
Subordination clause
A provision in a bond indenture that restricts the
issuer's future borrowing by subordinating the new
lender's claims on the firm to those of the existing
bond holders.
Subpart F
Special category of foreign-source "unearned" income
that is currently taxed by the IRS whether or not it is
22. remitted to the U.S.
Subperiod return
The return of a portfolio over a shorter period of time
than the evaluation period.
Subscription price
Price that the existing shareholders are allowed to pay
for a share of stock in a rights offering.
Subsidiary
A foreign-based affiliate that is a separately
incorporated entity under the host country's law.
Substitute sale
A method for hedging price risk that utilizes debt-
market instruments, such as interest rate futures, or
that involves selling borrowed securities as the
primary assets.
Substitution swap
A swap in which a money manager exchanges one
bond for another bond that is similar in terms of
coupon, maturity, and credit quality, but offers a
higher yield.
Sum-of-the-years'-digits depreciation
Method of accelerated depreciation.
Sunk costs
Costs that have been incurred and cannot be reversed.
Supermajority
Provision in a company's charter requiring a majority
of, say, 80% of shareholders to approve certain
changes, such as a merger.
Supply shock
An event that influences production capacity and costs
in an economy.
Support level
A price level below which it is supposedly difficult for
a security or market to fall.
Surplus funds
Cash flow available after payment of taxes in the
project.
Surplus management
Related: asset management
Sushi bond
A eurobond issued by a Japanese corporation.
Sustainable growth rate
Maximum rate of growth a firm can sustain without
increasing financial leverage.
Swap
An arrangement whereby two companies lend to each
23. other on different terms, e.g. in different currencies,
and/or at different interest rates, fixed or floating.
Swap assignment
Related: swap sale.
Swap buy-back
The sale of an interest rate swap by one counterparty
to the other, effectively ending the swap.
Swap option
See:Swaption. Related: Quality option.
Swap rate
The difference between spot and forward rates
expressed in points, e.g., $0.0001 per pound sterling.
Swap reversal
An interest rate swap designed to end a counterparty's
role in another interest rate swap, accomplished by
counterbalancing the original swap in maturity,
reference rate, and notional amount.
Swap sale
Also called a swap assignment, a transaction that ends
one counterparty's role in an interest rate swap by
substituting a new counterparty whose credit is
acceptable to the other original counterparty.
Swaption
Options on interest rate swaps. The buyer of a
swaption has the right to enter into an interest rate
swap agreement by some specified date in the ' future.
The swaption agreement will specify whether the
buyer of the swaption will be a fixed-rate receiver or a
fixed-rate payer. The writer of the swaption becomes
the counterparty to the swap if the buyer exercises.
Sweep account
Account in which the bank takes all of the excess
available funds at the close of each business day and
invests them for the firm.
Swingline facility
Bank borrowing facility to provide finance while the
firm replaces U.S. commercial paper with
eurocommercial paper.
Swissy
Jargon for the Swiss Franc.
Switching
Liquidating an existing position and simultaneously
reinstating a position in another futures contract of the
same type. Symmetric cash matching An extension of
cash flow matching that allows for the short-term
borrowing of funds to satisfy a liability prior to the
24. liability due date, resulting in a reduction in the cost of
funding liabilities.
Symmetric cash matching
An extension of cash flow matching that allows for the
short-term borrowing of funds to satisfy a liability
prior to the liability due date, resulting in a reduction
in the cost of funding liabilities.
Synchronous data
Data available at the same time. In testing option-
pricing models, the price of the option and of the
underlying should be synchronous, representing the
same moment in the market.
Syndicate
A group of banks that acts jointly, on a temporary
basis, to loan money in a bank credit (syndicated
credit) or to underwrite a new issue of bonds.
Synergistic effect
A violation of value-additivity whereby the value of
the combination is greater than the sum of the
individual values.
Synthetics
Customized hybrid instruments created by blending an
underlying price on a cash instrument with the price of
a derivative instrument.
Systematic
Common to all businesses.
Systematic risk
Also called undiversifiable risk or market risk, the
minimum level of risk that can be obtained for a
portfolio by means of diversification across a large
number of randomly chosen assets. Related:
unsystematic risk.
Systematic risk principle
Only the systematic portion of risk matters in large,
well-diversified portfolios. The, expected returns must
be related only to systematic risks.